8,602 research outputs found
Cognitive Bias in Line-Up Identifications: The Impact of Administrator Knowledge
Prior knowledge of the likely or expected outcome of a forensic investigation has been shown to produce biases in the results obtained, reducing objectivity. The wide prevalence of such cognitive biases in many judgments has long been recognised by social psychologists, but its importance is only now gaining appreciation within forensic science communities. It is therefore timely to draw attention to the power of cognitive biases found in a study of the influence of administrator expectations on photographic identifications. Data are presented to show that when a line-up administrator knows the identity and position of a target within a line-up choice, in which the ‘witness’ is ignorant of the actual target, that target is more than twice as likely to be selected compared with when the administrator is kept ‘blind’. These findings, taken together with related studies, support the recommendation that all forensic analyses are made ‘double-blind’—a method that has proven to be effective in reducing such effects within the social sciences
Application of interactive computer graphics in wind-tunnel dynamic model testing
The computer-controlled data-acquisition system recently installed for use with a transonic dynamics tunnel was described. This includes a discussion of the hardware/software features of the system. A subcritical response damping technique, called the combined randomdec/moving-block method, for use in windtunnel-model flutter testing, that has been implemented on the data-acquisition system, is described in some detail. Some results using the method are presented and the importance of using interactive graphics in applying the technique in near real time during wind-tunnel test operations is discussed
Determination of subcritical damping by moving-block/randomdec applications
Two techniques are described which allow the determination of subcritical dampings and frequencies during aeroelastic testing of flight vehicles. The moving-block technique is shown to have the advantage of being able to provide damping and frequency information for each mode which might be present in a signal trace, but it has the disadvantage of requiring that the structure be excited transiently. The randomdec technique requires only random turbulence for excitation, but the randomdec signature is difficult to analyze when more than one mode is present. It is shown that by using the moving-block technique to analyze the randomdec signatures, the best features of both methods are gained. Examples are presented illustrating the direct application of the moving-block method to model helicopter rotor testing and application of the combined moving-block/randomdec method to flutter studies of two fixed-wing models
Electrodynamics with radiation reaction
The self force of electrodynamics is derived from a scalar field. The
resulting equation of motion is free of all of the problems that plague the
Lorentz Abraham Dirac equation. The age-old problem of a particle in a constant
field is solved and the solution has intuitive appeal.Comment: 5 page
Few-body resonances of unequal-mass systems with infinite interspecies two-body s-wave scattering length
Two-component Fermi and Bose gases with infinitely large interspecies s-wave
scattering length exhibit a variety of intriguing properties. Among these
are the scale invariance of two-component Fermi gases with equal masses, and
the favorable scaling of Efimov features for two-component Bose gases and
Bose-Fermi mixtures with unequal masses. This paper builds on our earlier work
[D. Blume and K. M. Daily, arXiv:1006.5002] and presents a detailed discussion
of our studies of small unequal-mass two-component systems with infinite
in the regime where three-body Efimov physics is absent. We report on
non-universal few-body resonances. Just like with two-body systems on
resonance, few-body systems have a zero-energy bound state in free space and a
diverging generalized scattering length. Our calculations are performed within
a non-perturbative microscopic framework and investigate the energetics and
structural properties of small unequal-mass two-component systems as functions
of the mass ratio , and the numbers and of heavy and
light atoms. For purely attractive Gaussian two-body interactions, we find that
the and systems exhibit three-body and four-body
resonances at mass ratios and 10.4(2), respectively. The
three- and four-particle systems on resonance are found to be large. This
suggests that the corresponding wave function has relatively small overlap with
deeply-bound dimers, trimers or larger clusters and that the three- and
four-body systems on resonance have a comparatively long lifetime. Thus, it
seems feasible that the features discussed in this paper can be probed
experimentally with present-day technology.Comment: 17 pages, 17 figure
Fermion Helicity Flip Induced by Torsion Field
We show that in theories of gravitation with torsion the helicity of fermion
particles is not conserved and we calculate the probability of spin flip, which
is related to the anti-symmetric part of affine connection. Some cosmological
consequences are discussed.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in Europhysics Letter
Torsion as electromagnetism and spin
We show that it is possible to formulate the classical Einstein-Maxwell-Dirac
theory of spinors interacting with the gravitational and electromagnetic fields
as the Einstein-Cartan-Kibble-Sciama theory with the Ricci scalar of the
traceless torsion, describing gravity, and the torsion trace acting as the
electromagnetic potential.Comment: 6 pages; published versio
BEC-BCS Crossover of a Trapped Two-Component Fermi Gas with Unequal Masses
We determine the energetically lowest lying states in the BEC-BCS crossover
regime of s-wave interacting two-component Fermi gases under harmonic
confinement by solving the many-body Schrodinger equation using two distinct
approaches. Essentially exact basis set expansion techniques are applied to
determine the energy spectrum of systems with N=4 fermions. Fixed-node
diffusion Monte Carlo methods are applied to systems with up to N=20 fermions,
and a discussion of different guiding functions used in the Monte Carlo
approach to impose the proper symmetry of the fermionic system is presented.
The energies are calculated as a function of the s-wave scattering length a_s
for N=2-20 fermions and different mass ratios \kappa of the two species. On the
BEC and BCS sides, our energies agree with analytically-determined first-order
correction terms. We extract the scattering length and the effective range of
the dimer-dimer system up to \kappa = 20. Our energies for the
strongly-interacting trapped system in the unitarity regime show no shell
structure, and are well described by a simple expression, whose functional form
can be derived using the local density approximation, with one or two
parameters. The universal parameter \xi for the trapped system for various
\kappa is determined, and comparisons with results for the homogeneous system
are presented.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, extended versio
- …